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THURSDAY, MARCH 1ST, 1928. THE BARNWELL PEOPLE-SENTINEL, BARNWELL, SOUTH CAE PAGE FITE Tier, • and erea boats Q ’Phone Us the Names of Your Visitors, ot Other Items of Local = Interest for This Column. - Mrs. Iris Chisholm spent Tuesday in Hampton. Dr. R. A. Deaon was a visitor Augusta Tuesday. in Mrs. Jamies DeL( eryi in Augusta. ch sent the week- S. J. Wilsdn, of Augusta, was in town on business Monday. JC /Culbreath, of Johnston, was a business visitor here Monday. J. T. Garrett, of Greenwood, was a business visitor' here Monday and Tuesday. Mrs. James DeLoacfi was a visitor in Cloumbia Monday. » E. F. Hogmer, of New York City, was the week-end g'ucet of Col. and Mrs. Harry D. Calhoun. Dr. J. L. Smith and T. M. Willis, wore among the Williston visitors to the county seat Monday. * Mrs. Solomon Blatt and her house guest, Mrs. Milford Frankenstein, of New York City, motored to Aiken yes terday (Wednesday) afternoon. , Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Goodson, of Ulmer, were business visitors here Monday. -v f Col. N. B. Gamble and Lloyd A. Plexico motored to August a rtess Monday. on busi- r Miss Frances Simms is visiting her sifter, Miss Kate M. S\mms, in Columbia, this week. Mrs. Milford Frankenstein, of New York City, is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Solomon Blatt, while ei&route to her home after a 'trip to Havana, Cuba. '*** Showing Excellent Pictures. mmmLmmm R. G. Herndon, manager of the Vamp Theatre in Barnwell, is show ing some splendid pictures at that popular movie house. Monday night the production was “Buttons,” which showed Jackie Coogan, the star boy actor, at his best. Tuesday night local fight and movie fans were given the opportunity of seeing Gene Tun- ney and Jack Dempsey in the cham pionship battle at Chicago. Mr. Heirn- don says that all that is necessary to insure a continuance of the best pro ductions is the patronage of the peo ple of this section. - ‘Damyartkees” Annoy— ‘‘Inconsistent” Colie / Army Officers Visit Barnwell. D. C. Bush, of Ellenton, and W. T. Hankinson, of Meyer’s Mill,.were busi- m«ss visitors here Monday. Mrs. B-aynard Calhoun and Mrs. Robinson, of Allendale, were visitors here Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. E. E. Murphey, Mrs. Florence Richm'dson, Mrs. J. C. G. Black, Mrs. Love joy and Mrs. Williams, of Au gusta, were the guests of Mrs. Lizzie M. Cave Monday afternoon. i ■ The Rev. and Mrs. M. L. Banks, Mrs. William McNab and Mrs. W. J. Lemon attended the Zion Missionary Meeting of the Methodist Church at Denmark Friday afternoon. ; , ~ B USIXESC fTILDERS % 1 i Y v C M X**X»*I**X* , S**X*<»*!*«X»«X**>v*»X**r*<**!**X* "FOR SALE:—Several hundred each Johnquill and Spider Lily Bulbs, one, cent each.—Mrs. George- We a the is be e, Barnwell, S, C. COTTON SEED FOR SALE:—A limited^ arpSunt of Coker’s Super seven No. 1, for planting; one and a sixteenth inch staple. Price $1.00 per bushel.—W. L. CaveT Barnwell, S. C. FOR SALE:—Excel Melon Seel, selected from melons grown on my Tarm. ~ $1.00 per pound, cash with order.—B. F. Anderson, Dunbarton, S. C.> 3-1-if. Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Price and Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Langley spent Wed nesday with Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Howell ih Lamar. They made the tii]) in the former’s car. There will be an t vster ’su^"'' 1 ' the Barnwell Baptist Chuich to-mj^'i row (Friday) night, the proceeds of w’hich will go to the organ fund of the church. PVke 35 cents per plate. See other announcement on page six of this issue. „ Major Lamming Parsons, U. S. Army, of Bamberg, was here Tuesday in the interest of the C. M. T. Camp.* Barnwell ^County has been alloted ten students. Any boy between 17 and 25 years of age ( desiring to at tend the camp should write to Major Parsons at Bamberg. [ —Capt. Furman W. Hardee was with Major Parsons. Capt. Hardee^ prior to his entrance into the army was a citizen of Conway.- He has been in the 22nd U. S. Infantry, but is now on leave of absence before sailing for Honolulu for foreign service. Charles P. Stewart, in The Augusta Chronicle. ^ ■ . ■ „ Consistency is a virtue of small minds. / Washington, Feb. 27<—Senator Colie Blease (Coleman but they all call him “Colie” for short) is one of those southerners who grew* up under the impression that “damyankee” was one word/ olie was do t wn in his home State of South Carcmna ricently, denounc ing A1 Smith as a “nullificationist.” This struck some of his fellow sena tors as excrutionatingly funny. Colie was referring to A1 in con nection with the Eighteenth amend- Seven Pines School Responds. County Superintendent of, Educa tion Horace J. Crouch reports that another Barnwell County School has responded to the appeal for the Child Welfare Association of China anjd has forwarded his check for $1.46, the amount raised by the Seven Pines School at Snelling, to the State Super intendent’s office. The following statement fipm Mi's. W. B. Parker tca?her, shows the amounts contribut ed'by The various grades: Fir^> grade, 31 cents; second grade 10 cents; fourth grade, 30 cents; sixth grade, £5 cents; teacher, 50 cents $1.46. LOST:—One pointer dog, named Jack; liver colored with white spotted legs and bob-tail. Reward if return ed to Dorris Still, Leigh Banana Case Co., Ellenton, S. C. — FOR SALE :—B7tA Reef eggs from pure bred stock, $1.00 per setting.— +VH. Miller, Barnwtjl, S. C. 2-23-2tp FOR SALE:—Tancred Strain White Leghorn eggs, $1.50 per setting of 15, $10.00 per hundred. Also BABY CHICKS—$16.00 per hundred. Orders booked now for March delivery. Eggs are from prize-winning stock. —W. H. Moody, Jr., Kline, S. C. 2-9-tfc. •. ^ f » MISS MOLAIR ENTERTAINS SMART SET CLUB. ^ M isk Ella Louise Molair entertained the members of"the. Smart Scf Bridge Club. Thursday afternoon. The high score prize, a shoulder flower, was won by Mrs. D. B. Witherspoon, and the consolation, a box of powder, was cut by Miss Blanche Poiter. The guests of honor, Mrs. Ralph Brown and Mrs. Austiff Cadle, were each pro sented with a-flower. Sandwiches and coffee were served during the after noon. The members of the Ladies’ Auxil iary of the Barnwell Episcopal Chuich met Monday afternoon with Mrs. Har ry D. Calhoun, at which time the fol lowing officers were elected for the ensuing year: Miss BeBeo Patter sen, president; Mrs, (A F. Molair,-vice president; Mrs. H. D. Calhoun, edu National secretary; Mrs.\S. V. Brown custodian. The members of the auxiliary have taken up the study of the Prayer Book, and the book7~ “The Church *Awako,” during Lent, and each mem her will also be expected to do a cer tain amount of sewing for the benefr: of missions. Archdeacon Burton, of Allendale attended the meeting Monday after noon. ALL EXPENSE TOURS TO THE Acadian Country “THELANDOF EVANGELINE”, The Maritime Provi- July 1 to July 13. Jtly 15 to July 27. July 29 to Aug. 10.^ Aub. 12 to Aug. 24. Aug.- 26 to Sept. 7. UNDER DIRECTION OF I. V. WOOD, Inc. YOUNG PEOPLE’S MISSIONARY SOCIETY MEETS. The .Young Peoples’ Missionary Society held its regular monthly meet ing Thursday afternoon at four o’ clock at the home of Miss Ruth Clary. 9 v" A vory enoyable program w^s ren dered, after which delicious refresh ments were served by the hostess. ■ W. F. Duncan and J. R. Moody, of Mmyer’s Mill, called at The Peopie- Sentinel office Monday to join this paper’s big family of satisfied read- ers. —• I AIRY-MOODY MARRIAGE. place^dOm^ Tuesday evening, February 27th, at the parsonage of the Barnwell Bap- S Auxiliary Meets. he regularly votes as he doesn’t want to, because he must, to hold his seat. Plenty of others vote their consti* tuents* convictions, rather than their own, but they make believe the con victions are theirs, too. ^ cationist.” Colie never heeds ’em. If he’s inconsistent, he’s inconsisfc- ent on a grand scale, too. Colie ostentatiously gags and chokes ever^time he’s required to shout “no” on a wet proposition or “aye” on a dry one, but he gets it out somehow. There’s a certain magnificence about tftis. It reveals Colie’s nerve. He takes his medicine but he won’t pretend he likes it. course. “But. how,” asked these senatorial brethren, on his re turn, “about South Carolina, in con nection with the Fifteenth?” Such cracks don’t disturb Colie a bit. What does .a “damyankee” knbw about the South's problems!—is his view. , Possibly some folks won’t consider this answer of Colie’s fully explana tory. However, it’^ the only one they’ll getv out of Senator Blease. When he's said his say, he’s through. Take or leave it. He’ll amplify for no “damyankee.” The peculiar thing is that Colie has vituperated the Eighteenth amend ment and the Volstead act in far stronger teims than A1 Smith ever used. When you stop to consider, though Smith is known as a wet, his lan guage toward piohibition always has been parlimentary. Colie has ran sacked 'the dictionary for adjectives, to express his ^oor opinion of it, <j*nd he had an extraordinary vocabulary to begin with. All in all. then, for Colie Blease to is going some-^so his Smithite col leagues argue. For that matter leageus argue. For that matter they a<^d, it’s playing horse with his tory for a South Carolina senator to find fault with anybody as a “nullifi Criticism of him for it, from “dam* yankee” sources, bounces off him like BB bullets off a man-o-war. “So long,” he announced on t$>e senate floor recently, “aa South Caro* lina approves my racord, what do I care what anybody else (meaning any ’damyankee’) thinks?” Father, mother and little Tommy were in the street car. Mother and Tommy had secured seats, but poor father had to stand. Mother: “Tommy, doesn’t it pain you to see your father reaching for a strap?” Tommy: “Only at home, mother.” *. Advertise in The People-Sentinel “Then why in heck,” demanded the puzzled wets, furious at the spectacle of a legislator with such ideas, sup porting every arid measure that comes up, “do you invariably vote dry?” “Because,” fumes Colie, mad all over at bung forced to-do so, “my j State insists„Qii_ it—but I t hink it’s j a blinkety-blank Tool law.” Senator Blease is the one lone ( member of congress who publicly—; not to say vociferously—admits that throats Rub Vicks on throat and chest. Reliewsr two ways at once— absorbed, inhaled. Fertilizer Investigation toy Fanners show that — INTERNATIONAL Crop - Producing FERTILIZERS Are worth more because they produce Greater Prolita at Harvest time/ • T for sale by— v . •' v . ' v V v’ C. F. MOLAIR, Barnwell, S. C. I. F. and M. KEELER, Blackvffle, S. C. Send for Booklets which five Valuable Experiences of Farmers International Agricultural Corporation * manutACTuasas 1 & er men ohadb v AUGUSTA, GA. r i Over 21 million jars usedyearly Now Is the Time, to Plant Send us your orders for the BEST NURSERY STOCK. / FREE cataloir upon request. • -TJl Augusta Fruitland Nurseries Georgia Resolution. At a meeting of the Barnwell Methodist Woman’s Missionary So ciety, Febiuary 7, 1928, the following resolutions were passed: Resolved: . 1. That while we-are rejoicing ; n the completion of our new church, we reverently lift our hearts in grati tude and praise to our Heavenly Father, ..who has accepted our gifts an,d blessed our tffftrts to this end. 2. That we gratefully call to mind in what large measure this blessing 4s due to the unselfish service of ot building, committee, and in particular, of Mr. W. J. Lemon, who gave ?o freely of his time, labor and business abHty to this cause. 3. That we offer our sincerest <**!-x-xk*<*x*<**;*x*<* i X m X^x*<*<^*^ f visit Our Store for the of Furniture thanks and appreciation to this com- jT-iUee, whose faithful*owrk and good list < ’hiu?h, when Miss Hester Irene I judgment have made possible to us Fairy, of Orangeburg, was married a hou * c of worship both btttutiful and to T. S. Moody, of Dunbarton, by the Rev. W. M. Jones, D. D., in the pres- enee--of ■a few relatives and Triends. suitable in every way to the needs of our congregation. 4. That a copy of these resolutions The bride belongs to a prominent 1° Church Building Com- Orangoburg family, and is a popular teacher in the Dunbarton High School. The groom is a son of Henry J. M-Oody, a qd is a prominent business mar. of Dunbarton. IN HONOR OF VISITOR. ... * • For attractively illustrated ^ • -* ^ ; J ' itinerary and full information write or, consult W. E. McGee, D. P. A., Southern Railway System, Columbia, S. C. ivittee, to our weekly newspaper and also to our Quarterly Conference. — (Signed) Mrs. E. F. Woodward, Pres. Mrs. Max Bronson, Vrie-Pres. Mr. a nd Mrs. Solomon Blatt enter tained with a most delightful dinner party Monday evening at their lovely Marlboro Avenue home in honot* of their guest, Mrs. Milford Franken stein, of New York City, covers being; laid for 12 guests. IA Tuesday a f^prnoon, Mrs. Blatt X entertained, with three . tables of y bride in honor of Mrs. Frankenstein. ■ A After several rounds had been enjoy* ed, it was found that the high score prize, a nest of jars, had been wmn by Mrs. Edgar A, Brown, while the consolation,' two decks of playing cards, wa<? cut by Mrs. R. S. Dicks, j During the afternoon the hostess I served a delightful salad course. “Ten years ag-o I arrived in this town with only one quarter, but that quarter began my fortune a t once.”' “You must have invested it very profitably?” * “I did: I telegraphed home for money.” , ;»*X~XK'*»X**X**X # *X~.**: , *>*X» , X* , X**X~> Mrs. Angus Patterson’s BEAUTY SHOPPE EVERYTHING PERTAINING TO BEAUTY. Phone 117 — Barnwell, S. C. j v*X m X^^XK'<~X' m >*X~X~X , **X*<~H , v onderful Bargains in New Furniture « . * ■ /'* • • % - *•- Ten pieces - 45 x 60 table - and other . sizes - six foot extension, five side chairs and armchair, with velour seats, server; 72 inch Buffet and large China Cabinet, all in select ed Walnut. A beautiful design. Get our prices on Furniture before buying elsewhere. Barnwell m m m *